-:Undertaker:-
02-07-2007, 05:21 PM
Cameron reshuffles shadow team
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/42453000/jpg/_42453006_cameron_203.jpg Mr Cameron reshuffled his teams days after the PM made changes
Conservative leader David Cameron has reshuffled his Shadow Cabinet bringing in more women and younger MPs.
Education spokesman David Willetts has been moved and party chairman Francis Maude replaced by Caroline Spelman.
Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, a career diplomat and former head of the Joint Intelligence committee, becomes shadow secretary for security.
Sayeeda Warsi is shadow communities secretary. She is thought to be the first Muslim in such a senior role.
The reshuffle comes four days after new PM Gordon Brown made extensive changes.
Education split
Dame Pauline will be elevated to the House of Lords as a working peer, as will Ms Warsi, a British-born Muslim of Pakistani origin who was Conservative Party vice-chairwoman.
Dame Pauline was most recently head of Mr Cameron's security policy review group, looking at national security, including terrorism, Islamic fundamentalism and social cohesion.
Among changes made by Mr Brown was the splitting of the education portfolio into two - the Department for Children, Schools and Families and the Department of Innovation, Universities and Skills.
Mr Cameron moved Mr Willetts to shadow John Denham as minister in charge of universities.
Mr Willetts was widely blamed for the internal row over grammar schools when he distanced himself from the traditional Tory belief in academic selection.
Michael Gove, previously the Tory housing spokesman, will shadow Ed Balls on schools and children. Mr Gove entered Parliament in 2005, as did Jeremy Hunt who joins the shadow cabinet in charge of culture from being a spokesman on work and pensions. Nick Herbert, who will handle justice, also enters the shadow cabinet. He had been spokesman on police reform.
What annoys me about these performers, Blair and Cameron, is how they put people like women and younger people in jobs just because of their gender or age, I think personally that it should be who is best at the job, not what will sound good in the tabloids.
Cameron = Blair
http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/42453000/jpg/_42453006_cameron_203.jpg Mr Cameron reshuffled his teams days after the PM made changes
Conservative leader David Cameron has reshuffled his Shadow Cabinet bringing in more women and younger MPs.
Education spokesman David Willetts has been moved and party chairman Francis Maude replaced by Caroline Spelman.
Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, a career diplomat and former head of the Joint Intelligence committee, becomes shadow secretary for security.
Sayeeda Warsi is shadow communities secretary. She is thought to be the first Muslim in such a senior role.
The reshuffle comes four days after new PM Gordon Brown made extensive changes.
Education split
Dame Pauline will be elevated to the House of Lords as a working peer, as will Ms Warsi, a British-born Muslim of Pakistani origin who was Conservative Party vice-chairwoman.
Dame Pauline was most recently head of Mr Cameron's security policy review group, looking at national security, including terrorism, Islamic fundamentalism and social cohesion.
Among changes made by Mr Brown was the splitting of the education portfolio into two - the Department for Children, Schools and Families and the Department of Innovation, Universities and Skills.
Mr Cameron moved Mr Willetts to shadow John Denham as minister in charge of universities.
Mr Willetts was widely blamed for the internal row over grammar schools when he distanced himself from the traditional Tory belief in academic selection.
Michael Gove, previously the Tory housing spokesman, will shadow Ed Balls on schools and children. Mr Gove entered Parliament in 2005, as did Jeremy Hunt who joins the shadow cabinet in charge of culture from being a spokesman on work and pensions. Nick Herbert, who will handle justice, also enters the shadow cabinet. He had been spokesman on police reform.
What annoys me about these performers, Blair and Cameron, is how they put people like women and younger people in jobs just because of their gender or age, I think personally that it should be who is best at the job, not what will sound good in the tabloids.
Cameron = Blair